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Here's a great example of the distorted collectivist mindset of Marxists and socialists who want to toss out individuality and liberty in exchange for centrally-commanded doublespeak. What will you do when these zombies come after your individual liberties in the name of "the common good?"

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Viewer Comments (5 total)

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Lo
Posted 10/16/2011 4:24:35 PM

If it were not for the repetitiveness and the artificially forced emotions, I would think it is just many people trying to communicate.
But it looks and sounds more like brain washing, repetition of a leader who has all repeat what he wants them to say and think.
It reminds me of this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92zPsNqp8Fo&feature=related
(the dark history of my country, and so I do not find masses becoming emotional funny)
I always feel very uncomfortable when masses get emotional and loud...the way to explosion/violence is often not far, as we can see in many cases in movements that seemingly start peacefully, or during sports events, but soon change to a different "quality", madness and stupidity.
Mass emotions generally are dangerous and lack reason and true honesty.
I do not want to say that part of what people here want is wrong. I support honest caring and sharing.
But like always, certain people know exactly how to take advantage of movements, using them

PJThao
Posted 10/12/2011 12:42:22 PM

I can't imagine talking and then pausing, talking, pausing, talking, pausing. That's so irritating to me. This reminds me of a technique we use to get kids attention by saying "if you can hear me raise your hands", because kids tend to have a short span of attention. I hope that's not the case here.

Fuskolle
Posted 10/11/2011 3:25:20 PM

Sorry, but I don't interpret this in the same sense as you. I listened through the whole thing, and is more fascinated by this technique and how it works to get a huge group of individuals to cooperate without electrical gadgets, microphones, loudspeakers etc.
I don't see "zombie cult", but focused people who are a conscious part of some interaction. If you want to see zombie cult, try looking into peoples livingrooms when the TV is on... In any other hierarchical setting (like the workplace of the visiting congressman), people would be really zombie-like, applauding him and hang by his every word. Here, the group succeeds in communicating in a fascinating way, as a group to an individual.
If there is about to be change, we have to start experimenting with other means of interaction than the formalized, hierarchical ways that really makes the mass to a zombie-like amoeba without a voice. We can't be afraid of things that don't work the way we are used to. This didn't put me off,

noleftrightparadigm
Posted 10/11/2011 3:23:47 PM

clearly you have never been in a true democratic assembly of hundreds of people - maybe thousands here. there is no leader, anyone can disagree at a any time and the use of a louder PA system is strictly forbidden. you need your neighbors to repeat everything just to hear a word. I challenge you to try and relate to hundreds of people at once in real life.